
American households are already feeling the squeeze of a slower, pricier economy, a situation some observers warn could quickly cascade into a full-blown stagflationary episode—one in which growth stalls and inflation stays sticky. The Federal Reserve’s next move could determine whether those voices are right.
For many consumers, the economy already looks like stagflation. Inflation has remained stubbornly stuck between 2% and 4% since 2023, and the most recent reading (cataloging how much higher prices were in March compared to a year prior) was the highest inflation data point in two years, driven by rising fuel prices.
Meanwhile, borrowing costs remain elevated, and wage gains are slipping, struggling to keep up with everything else getting more expensive. That strain is showing up in public sentiment. Affordability reigns as the dominant financial concern for Americans, according to a Gallup survey released Tuesday. A record 55% of Americans now say their financial situation is deteriorating, the fifth consecutive year of collapsing sentiment, and marking a lower point for Americans’ financial optimism than reported during the 2008 and 2020 recessions.
That mix of factors looks an awful lot like stagflation to Ray Dalio, the billionaire founder of investment firm Bridgewater Associates. In an interview with CNBC aired Monday, Dalio warned of sticky inflation accompanied by slow growth, a bad situation that could be made worse by the leadership transition and murky policy outlook at the Federal Reserve.
“We’re certainly in a stagflationary period,” Dalio said. “How that transpires has a lot of parts to it, but we’re certainly in that.”
The Fed’s narrow path
Stagflation is the policy nightmare that combines weak growth, persistent inflation, and often a soft labor market. It is especially painful because the usual fix for one problem can aggravate another. The Federal Reserve can lower interest rates to boost activity, but that lever can also stoke inflation. Likewise, keeping rates high can deter buying and restrain price hikes, but can also reduce purchasing power and weaken the job market.
The Fed is usually left to navigate this tightrope alone, insulated from political pressure. But in his second term, President Donald Trump has repeatedly pushed the Fed’s current leadership to cut rates, arguing rate cuts will support growth and ease pressure on consumers and businesses. Trump has reserved particular criticism for Jerome Powell, the central bank’s chair who will step down from his position in May.
The Fed traditionally steers clear of political whims when devising monetary policy in part to maintain credibility. If investors and consumers begin to think the Fed is willing to tolerate higher inflation, expectations of future inflation—which can be just as influential as the real thing—can drift upward, making price growth harder to contain.
Trump’s attempts to interfere with the Fed’s decision-making has sparked concern the central bank’s credibility post-Powell is already being undermined.
The outgoing chair will likely be replaced by Kevin Warsh, a Trump nominee who has an increasingly clear runway to Senate confirmation. Trump has praised Warsh since his selection in January, and some of the nominee’s policy proposals are designed to give the Fed more wiggle room to decide on potential rate cuts. Before last year, Warsh had a hawkish reputation for being tough on inflation, but has repositioned himself since entering the running to align with Trump’s preference for low rates, while also criticizing the Fed’s current leadership for overmanaging the economy.
Warsh might not have much leeway to implement the policy “regime change” he suggested during his confirmation hearing last week, in part because his decisions would likely be constrained by other Fed governors, who might yet count Powell among their ranks after he steps down. It would also be an awkward moment for a monetary dove to take the job, given the war in the Middle East and inflation’s upward trend lately.
Kicked while they’re down
Dalio said the risk of “more immediate inflation” makes rate cuts a difficult decision to justify at the moment. Views on the Fed’s credibility also hinge on how it navigates this moment, and the perception that the central bank might not be as concerned with higher inflation could be damaging to the country’s economic outlook, he added.
“Everyone’s going to look at how he behaves,” Dalio said of Warsh. Given the information available to the Fed right now, he added, cutting interest rates would likely hurt the central bank’s standing. “The Federal Reserve would lose its credibility,” he said.
Other Wall Street voices have flagged similar risks. Apollo chief economist Torsten Slok has warned the combination of tariffs, sticky inflation, and slowing growth can create a stagflation-like setup, one that would be hostile to both markets and consumers.
For regular Americans, the stagflation debate is not abstract, showing up in every job search and in every monthly cost from utility bills to rent payments. Gallup’s findings on Americans’ mounting financial pessimism suggests many households already believe the economy is working against them instead of for them. A Fed that misreads enough to lose credibility could turn those feelings into something much more tangible.
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